"At the end of the day..."

Socializing and general posts on wide-ranging topics. Remember, it's Poststructural!
User avatar
Walden
Chiffmaster General
Posts: 11030
Joined: Thu May 09, 2002 6:00 pm
antispam: No
Location: Coal mining country in the Eastern Oklahoma hills.
Contact:

Post by Walden »

Man, y'all're as hard strapped for cliches as a 2-bit yodeler with a head cold!
Reasonable person
Walden
User avatar
Wombat
Posts: 7105
Joined: Mon Sep 23, 2002 6:00 pm
antispam: No
Location: Probably Evanston, possibly Wollongong

Post by Wombat »

Going forward, especially when push comes to shove, I know it's the end of the day when the fat lady sings. That's my benchmark. She ticks all the boxes, which is quite an achievement when you're thinking outside the square.
User avatar
khl
Posts: 628
Joined: Sat Apr 09, 2005 7:59 pm
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Tell us something.: Longtime member of Chiff and Fipple. I own/have owned more whistles than a person should, I think. But I’m not complaining.
Location: Utah

Post by khl »

At the end of the day . . .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CxZoUARPsFc
Keith
User avatar
SteveShaw
Posts: 10049
Joined: Mon Mar 17, 2003 4:24 am
antispam: No
Location: Beautiful, beautiful north Cornwall. The Doom Bar is on me.
Contact:

Post by SteveShaw »

Moving swiftly on...
"Last night, among his fellow roughs,
He jested, quaff'd and swore."

They cut me down and I leapt up high
I am the life that'll never, never die.
I'll live in you if you'll live in me -
I am the lord of the dance, said he!
User avatar
crookedtune
Posts: 4255
Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2006 7:02 pm
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Location: Raleigh, NC / Cape Cod, MA

Post by crookedtune »

This thread got away from us. We should have nipped it in the bud.
Charlie Gravel

“I am so clever that sometimes I don't understand a single word of what I am saying.”
― Oscar Wilde
User avatar
Innocent Bystander
Posts: 6816
Joined: Wed Aug 03, 2005 12:51 pm
antispam: No
Location: Directly above the centre of the Earth (UK)

Post by Innocent Bystander »

I'm happy as a clam to see the idiom famine is over. Now we can ring the curtain down on the whole sorry affair. Make no mistake, old age pensioners and teenagers will be dancing in the streets. It's the end of an era. A day that will go down in history. Will there be other famines? It remains to be seen. But one thing is certain: Life goes on. (Aaaaackk!)
Wizard needs whiskey, badly!
User avatar
SteveShaw
Posts: 10049
Joined: Mon Mar 17, 2003 4:24 am
antispam: No
Location: Beautiful, beautiful north Cornwall. The Doom Bar is on me.
Contact:

Post by SteveShaw »

Yep, epoch-making, not a word of a lie.
"Last night, among his fellow roughs,
He jested, quaff'd and swore."

They cut me down and I leapt up high
I am the life that'll never, never die.
I'll live in you if you'll live in me -
I am the lord of the dance, said he!
User avatar
burnsbyrne
Posts: 1345
Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2002 6:00 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: Cleveland, Ohio

Post by burnsbyrne »

Wombat wrote:Going forward, especially when push comes to shove, I know it's the end of the day when the fat lady sings. That's my benchmark. She ticks all the boxes, which is quite an achievement when you're thinking outside the square.
Wombat,
You forgot to leverage your benchmark and drill down to the bottom line of the data.
Mike
User avatar
Nanohedron
Moderatorer
Posts: 38239
Joined: Wed Dec 18, 2002 6:00 pm
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Tell us something.: Been a fluter, citternist, and uilleann piper; committed now to the way of the harp.

Oh, yeah: also a mod here, not a spammer. A matter of opinion, perhaps.
Location: Lefse country

Post by Nanohedron »

TonyHiggins wrote:Remember when we used to 'interface' with one another?
Yes. A lost art.

Image

I remember the day when "He/she gives good interface" was a positive, if somewhat racy, recommendation. Then corporatespeak took over. Beige, beige times, these.
"If you take music out of this world, you will have nothing but a ball of fire." - Balochi musician
User avatar
Wombat
Posts: 7105
Joined: Mon Sep 23, 2002 6:00 pm
antispam: No
Location: Probably Evanston, possibly Wollongong

Post by Wombat »

Nanohedron wrote:
I remember the day when "He/she gives good interface" was a positive, if somewhat racy, recommendation. Then corporatespeak took over. Beige, beige times, these.
It can be quite hard to give everybody good interface when you're working the room.
User avatar
Jerry Freeman
Posts: 6074
Joined: Mon Dec 30, 2002 6:00 pm
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Location: Now playing in Northeastern Connecticut
Contact:

Post by Jerry Freeman »

"Happy as a clam ... ."

One of my favorites. Can anyone tell us the original, perfectly logical saying this is abbreviated from?

Best wishes,
Jerry
User avatar
Lambchop
Posts: 5768
Joined: Wed Jul 07, 2004 10:10 pm
antispam: No
Location: Florida

Post by Lambchop »

Jerry Freeman wrote:"Happy as a clam ... ."

One of my favorites. Can anyone tell us the original, perfectly logical saying this is abbreviated from?

Best wishes,
Jerry
You mean this one?
Origin

An early version is 'as happy as a clam at high water'. Clams are free from the attentions of predators at high tide, so perhaps that's a reason to consider them happy then. The earliest known citation doesn't mention water though. That's in Harvardiana, 1834:

"That peculiar degree of satisfaction, usually denoted by the phrase 'as happy as a clam'."
Here's a lovely poem to celebrate clam happiness . . . or happiness with clams . . .

John G. Saxe, the American writer best known for his poem The Blind Men and the Elephant, used the phrase in his Sonnet to a Clam, in the late 1840s:

Inglorious friend! most confident I am
Thy life is one of very little ease;
Albeit men mock thee with their similes,
And prate of being "happy as a clam!"
What though thy shell protects thy fragile head
From the sharp bailiffs of the briny sea?
Thy valves are, sure, no safety-valves to thee,
While rakes are free to desecrate thy bed,
And bear thee off, - as foemen take their spoil,
Far from thy friends and family to roam;
Forced, like a Hessian, from thy native home,
To meet destruction in a foreign broil!
Though thou art tender, yet thy humble bard
Declares, O clam! thy case is shocking hard!
I just love the part about being forced like a Hessian to meet destruction in a foreign broil. Not the forcing and broiling, you understand, but the literary-ness of it.

John G. Saxe turns out to have written some interesting musings on animals. Wonder what else he wrote . . . ?

http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/40900.html
Cotelette d'Agneau
User avatar
Doug_Tipple
Posts: 3829
Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2004 8:49 pm
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 10
Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
Contact:

Post by Doug_Tipple »

At the end of the day, excessive use of idioms, is more than just overly idiomatic; it's idiotic, so I'm out of here.
Jack
Posts: 15580
Joined: Sun Feb 09, 2003 6:00 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: somewhere, over the rainbow, and Ergoville, USA

Post by Jack »

Wombat wrote:when the fat lady sings
A couple months ago I watched a student-led opera production where the best vocalist there was a morbidly obese woman. She had the kind of voice that made you stop what you were thinking about and simply listen to her. And she did indeed have the final little part, then the show was over. It reminded me of that phrase.
User avatar
TonyHiggins
Posts: 2996
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2001 6:00 pm
Please enter the next number in sequence: 1
Location: SF East Bay, CA
Contact:

Post by TonyHiggins »

Cranberry wrote:
Wombat wrote:when the fat lady sings
A couple months ago I watched a student-led opera production where the best vocalist there was a morbidly obese woman. She had the kind of voice that made you stop what you were thinking about and simply listen to her. And she did indeed have the final little part, then the show was over. It reminded me of that phrase.
You know she was thinking about everybody else thinking it. Amazing discipline to get through it.

A nurse from Mississippi heard a recording of herself giving change of shift report when I was in the Air Force and she remarked, "Oh ma gawd, ah soun' like a mule eatin' briars." That left an impression on me.
Tony
http://tinwhistletunes.com/clipssnip/newspage.htm Officially, the government uses the term “flap,” describing it as “a condition, a situation or a state of being, of a group of persons, characterized by an advanced degree of confusion that has not quite reached panic proportions.”
Post Reply